- BES-BES/1-BES/1/4-BES/1/4/1-BES/1/4/1/7
- Item
- N/D
Parte de Buildings and Estates
A photograph in black and white of the Reception building.
Roger Blackmore
Parte de Buildings and Estates
A photograph in black and white of the Reception building.
Roger Blackmore
A photograph of the School Entrance
Parte de Buildings and Estates
A photograph of the entrance, looking toward the Chapel.
N/D
A photograph of the School Entrance
Parte de Buildings and Estates
A photograph of the entrance from the Buttercross, probably in the 1990s.
N/D
A photograph of the School Entrance
Parte de Buildings and Estates
A photograph of the entrance from the Buttercross, with pupils walking out. The photograph was probably taken for Marketing purposes.
Roger Blackmore
A photograph of the Haywood Building
Parte de Buildings and Estates
A photograph of the Haywood Building (foreground) and the Ashburton Dining Hall (background), probably in the 1960s. Number of print stamped on the back: 147835.
Photo-Reportage Ltd
A photograph of the Haywood Building
Parte de Buildings and Estates
A photograph of the Haywood Building, now the Ashburton building.
L.R. Shipsides
A negative of the Merton Building
Parte de Buildings and Estates
A negative of two photographs of the Merton Building, probably in the 1990s.
N/D
Photographs of the Merton Building
Parte de Buildings and Estates
Two photographs (A and B) of a boy and a girl walking out of the Merton Building. These photographs were probably taken for Marketing purposes or for publication in the School Magazine in the 1990s.
N/D
A photograph of the factory building
Parte de Buildings and Estates
A photograph of the factory building on Cemetery Road prior to its conversion by Oakham School into the Art and Design Centre. The photograph was taken by Brian and Elizabeth Nicholls Photography and the number of print is written on the back: G440/1.
Brian and Elizabeth Nicholls
A photograph of the dining hall
Parte de Buildings and Estates
A photograph in colour of pupils and staff eating in the Barraclough Dining Hall.
Roger Blackmore